I have connected a parallel-to-serial converter to a Dell Dimension and am getting output which I can save on another system using kermit. I want to go through the BIOS setup routine while capturing the session. Here is a sample of the opening screen of the BIOS setup
Dell Computer Corporation (www.dell.com) Page 1 of 2 Precision WorkStation 210 MT Setup BIOS Version: A07 ³ Time: 21:33:54 Date: Thu Oct 10, 2019 ³ This category sets the time in ³ 24-hour format (hours:minutes: Diskette Drive A: 3.5 inch, 1.44 MB ³ seconds) for the internal clock/ Diskette Drive B: Not Installed ³ calendar. ³ Drives: ³ To change the value in a field, Primary Type Cyls Hds Pre LZ Sec Size ³ enter a number or use the left- Drive 0: Auto EIDE Drive 65533 ³ or right-arrow key. Drive 1: None ³ Secondary ³ Changes take effect immediately. Drive 0: None ³ Drive 1: None ³ ³ Reserved Memory: None ÃÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ CPU Speed: 600 MHz ³ Pentiumø III Processor - 600MHz Num Lock: On ³ CPU ID: 681 Chassis Intrusion: Not Detected ³ Level 2 Cache: 256 KB Integrated Thermal Power-off: Enabled ³ System Memory: 1024 MB SDRAM Video DAC Snoop: Off ³ Service Tag: H8UD1 ³ ÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ Tab,Shift-Tab change fields³ change values³Alt-P next³Esc exit³Alt-B reboot The printer interface is obviously working even if what comes out is a bit de-formatted but I seem to recall, there may be a key sequence one can hit to cause printscreen to essentially stay in effect and echo a continuous log as one does things such as go through the setup. What you saw was what happens when striking the PrintScrn Key. I tried Control-Printscrn and got nothing. Shift-printscrn just did the same thing as printscrn by itself. Is there anything else I can try? Martin McCormick